Voices For Life

Voices for Life is an e-publication dedicated to informing and educating the public on pro-life and pro-family issues. We cover issues from conception until natural death, as well as all family life issues.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

By Nicole Mulvaney For NJ.com Princeton - Protesters last Wednesday afternoon called for the resignation of Peter Singer, a Princeton University professor whose controversial remarks about people with disabilities continue to ignite tensions.

Some activists sitting in motorized wheelchairs and others standing could be seen downtown at the corner of Witherspoon and Nassau streets outside Nassau Hall. Princeton Police Sgt. Steve Riccitello said the protest began at about 2:20 p.m. on the sidewalk opposite Palmer Square and spilled onto the roadway.

"Traffic was stopped on Nassau St. for about 20 mins. until we convinced the protesters to return to the sidewalk," Riccitello said. "No arrests were made and no summonses were issued."

Participants included disability rights activists from Pennsylvania Not Dead Yet and New Jersey centers for independent living, along with groups representing parents of people with disabilities.

See the video below on the protest

The 68-year-old bioethics professor, who is known as an advocate of animal rights, has garnered criticism for supporting euthanasia for disabled infants.

Similar protests erupted when the university hired Singer in 1999, with people taking to the streets with signs reading "What ethic would kill a disabled infant?"

Baby dolls laid in an open coffin Wednesday as protesters held signs urging Princeton University to publicly denounce recent statements by Singer promoting ending the lives of disabled infants through denial of health care.